Green Afterlives: Green Burial as an Environmental Land Use in Settler-Colonial British Columbia

dc.contributor.authorGawron, Gillian
dc.contributor.supervisorRowe, James K.
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-25T21:58:31Z
dc.date.available2023-09-25T21:58:31Z
dc.date.copyright2023en_US
dc.date.issued2023-09-25
dc.degree.departmentSchool of Environmental Studiesen_US
dc.degree.levelMaster of Arts M.A.en_US
dc.description.abstract“Green burial” is a form of death care in which cemeteries are made to restore a “natural” ecosystem, rather than a lawn-style landscape. While it has grown in popularity in recent years, the implications of green burial as a philosophy and a land use have not been explored in the British Columbian context. To address this gap, I brought together anthropological death scholarship with terror management theory, which locates a key cause of anthropocentric behaviour in a suppressed fear and subsequent denial of death, and applied these frameworks to four case studies of BC’s green burial grounds. I pursued three research questions. (1) Does green burial encourage an ecological view of the self? I found that green burial can promote the idea that humans are “part of nature,” but can still leave some anthropocentric assumptions intact. (2) Is green burial a death denying practice? While I saw that natural restoration in cemeteries can disguise the presence of death, such death denial serves, rather than harms, non-human beings. (3) What are the implications of green burial as a land use within the settler colonial context of BC? I found that in settler-run graveyards a “return to nature” can reinforce, rather than unsettle, the erasure of Indigenous people and traditions from this land. Ultimately, I found that green burial has an important role in alleviating the damaging environmental effects of conventional burial practices. However, a closer look at how green burial is actually being practiced in BC serves to complicate the often uncritical narratives present in the literature, and expose the tension that comes from treating damaging settler-nature relationships as a problem that can be solved in isolation from decolonial movements.en_US
dc.description.scholarlevelGraduateen_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1828/15436
dc.languageEnglisheng
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.rightsAvailable to the World Wide Weben_US
dc.subjectgreen burialen_US
dc.subjectterror management theoryen_US
dc.subjectconservationen_US
dc.subjectBritish Columbiaen_US
dc.subjectsettler colonialismen_US
dc.titleGreen Afterlives: Green Burial as an Environmental Land Use in Settler-Colonial British Columbiaen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US

Files

Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Name:
Gawron_Gillian_MA_2023.pdf
Size:
2.37 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
2 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description: